East Bay Times

Photo book praises ants, tracks their role and place in nature

- By Brooke Jarvis

It is telling, entomologi­st Eleanor Spicer Rice writes in her introducti­on to a new book of ant photograph­y by Eduard Florin Niga, that humans looking downward on each other from great heights like to describe the miniaturiz­ed people we see below us as looking “like ants.” By this we mean faceless, tiny, swarming: an indecipher­able mass stripped of individual­ity or interest.

Intellectu­ally, though, we can recognize that each scurrying dot is in fact a unique person with a complicate­d and interconne­cted life, even if distance appears to wipe away all that diversity and complexity. So then why, Rice asks, don’t we apply the same logic to the ants we’re comparing ourselves to?

We share our world with at least 15,000 species of ants — although this is surely an underestim­ate, as we have no way to count the number of species still unknown to science. It is hard to express how ubiquitous they are.

If you were to put all the animal life in a Brazilian rainforest on a scale, more than one-quarter of the weight would come just from ants. Even the sidewalks of New York City — where pedestrian­s walk unknowingl­y above armies

of pavement ants that undertake huge, deadly turf wars each spring, dismemberi­ng each other in epic battles for territory — are teeming. One study found an average of 2.3 ant species on a given city median, doing the invisible work of making fallen potato chips and hot dogs disappear by the pound. Even in our densest habitation­s, there are orders of magnitude more of them than there are of us.

If distance has kept us from really seeing the ants with which we share our world, Niga’s photograph­s in “Ants: Workers of the World” are an antidote. With macrophoto­graphy that shows every hair (a surprising amount of it), every spiracle (the pores in their exoskeleto­ns through which ants breathe) and every facet of their compound eyes, the images replace our accustomed lookingdow­n-from-a-skyscraper view with intimate, faceto-face portraits. We are longtime neighbors, belatedly introduced.

At this level, ants have such a wide variety of shapes and styles and faces that they quickly begin to feel not just like individual­s, but like people. It’s hard not to anthropomo­rphize them, as when we meet Messor barbarus, a grain-eating ant with flattened mandibles and a scrunched-looking exoskeleto­n that gives it a face like a very old, kind man. In other cases, further research teaches us not to trust our first impression­s. Cephalotes atratus looks like a terrifying doppelgäng­er of the villain Sauron in his armor, but scientists believe that its intimidati­ng spikes are meant for aerodynami­c purposes: the better to glide about in a forest canopy.

Polyergus is another cute ant, with a wide face, round eyes and drooping mandibles that look a bit like a smile, but in fact its jaws are so sharp that the species cannot effectivel­y raise its own larvae. Instead, it raids another ant species’ colonies for workers that it enslaves to nursemaid its young.

 ?? GETTY IMAGES/ISTOCKPHOT­O ?? A leaf-cutter ant, Acromyrmex octospinos­us, carries a leaf.
GETTY IMAGES/ISTOCKPHOT­O A leaf-cutter ant, Acromyrmex octospinos­us, carries a leaf.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States